I hope someone smarter than myself can figure this out and I hope I can even ask the question in a way that makes sense.
I have been going to PRS style matches with my desert tech SRS for almost a year now. One thing I have been fighting is a considerable amount of muzzle rise when a round goes off. So much so, it’s basically impossible to stay on target from a barricade using an utter bag that is strapped to the rifle. I even notice the rise or hop slightly from a bench with a bipod and rear bag. It’s even pretty bad if I switch from the 6.5CM to the 223R barrel shooting 55gr bullets. It’s there with a muzzle brake or with a 2lbs suppressor hanging off a 28” long barrel. I have even added four MDT weights to the hard guard. Right now the rifle is front heavy and it seems to have helped but it’s still very far off from where I would like it.
It was very eye opening when I shot an MPA chassis the other day and I was able to free recoil it on a barricade and still see misses, impacts and even bullet traces. The recoil was very minimal and very linearly straight back at me. This started making me think why my SRS was so fricken bad.
Is the reason the SRS has this much muzzle rise is not because of balance but rather because of where the round or propulsion originates from, being so far back In the rifle and away from the balancing point? Or does that not matter and you have to look at the whole chassis as a solid part of the fulcrum equation and I have some other issue to look for?
I have been going to PRS style matches with my desert tech SRS for almost a year now. One thing I have been fighting is a considerable amount of muzzle rise when a round goes off. So much so, it’s basically impossible to stay on target from a barricade using an utter bag that is strapped to the rifle. I even notice the rise or hop slightly from a bench with a bipod and rear bag. It’s even pretty bad if I switch from the 6.5CM to the 223R barrel shooting 55gr bullets. It’s there with a muzzle brake or with a 2lbs suppressor hanging off a 28” long barrel. I have even added four MDT weights to the hard guard. Right now the rifle is front heavy and it seems to have helped but it’s still very far off from where I would like it.
It was very eye opening when I shot an MPA chassis the other day and I was able to free recoil it on a barricade and still see misses, impacts and even bullet traces. The recoil was very minimal and very linearly straight back at me. This started making me think why my SRS was so fricken bad.
Is the reason the SRS has this much muzzle rise is not because of balance but rather because of where the round or propulsion originates from, being so far back In the rifle and away from the balancing point? Or does that not matter and you have to look at the whole chassis as a solid part of the fulcrum equation and I have some other issue to look for?